The Wiley Finance Series : Handbook of News Analytics in Finance

(Chris Devlin) #1

different common stocks in their portfolios. He points out that gathering information on
stocks requires resources and suggests that investors conserve these resources by actively
following only a few stocks. If investors behave this way, they will buy and sell only
those stocks that they actively follow. They will not impulsively buy stocks that they do
not follow simply because those stocks happen to catch their attention. Thus their
purchases will not be biased toward attention-grabbing stocks.
While Grullon, Kanatas, and Weston (2004) focus on the number of individuals and
institutions that own a stock and Gervais, Kaniel, and Mingelgrin (2001) focus on
returns subsequent to high (or low) volume periods, our principal empirical focus is
on the effect of attention on the imbalance in the number of purchases and sales of a
stock by individual investors. Our empirical finding that individual investors are net
buyers of attention-grabbing stocks is largely consistent with the empirical results in
Grullon, Kanatas, and Weston (2004). This finding is also consistent with the story of
Gervais, Kaniel, and Mingelgrin (2001) that increased visibility of a stock may attract
new investors. In addition to the effects of attention driven by short-sale constraints and
described by Miller (1977) and Mayshar (1983), we argue that for individual investors,
the search problem when buying a stock is much greater than when selling. Thus,
attention affects even the buy–sell imbalances of investors who already own a stock.


7.2 Data


In this study, we analyze investor trading data drawn from four sources: a large discount
brokerage, a small discount brokerage, a large full-service brokerage, and the Plexus
Group (a consulting firm that tracks the trading of professional money managers for
institutional clients).
The first dataset for this research was provided by a large discount brokerage firm.
It includes trading and position records for the investments of 78,000 households from
January 1991 through December 1996.^6 The data include all accounts opened by each
household at this discount brokerage firm. Sampled households were required to have
an open account with the discount brokerage firm during 1991. Roughly half of the
accounts in our analysis were opened prior to 1987, and half were opened between 1987
and 1991.
In this research, we focus on investors’ common stock purchases and sales. We
exclude from the current analysis investments in mutual funds (both open-end and
closed-end), American depository receipts (ADRs), warrants, and options. Of the
78,000 households sampled from the large discount brokerage, 66,465 had positions
in common stocks during at least one month; the remaining accounts held either cash or
investments in other than individual common stocks. Roughly 60% of the market value
in these households’ accounts was held in common stocks. There were more than
3 million trades in all securities; common stocks accounted for slightly more than
60% of all trades. In December 1996, these households held more than $4.5bn in
common stock. There were slightly more purchases (1,082,107) than sales (887,594)
during our sample period, though the average value of stocks sold ($13,707) was slightly
higher than the value of stocks purchased ($11,205). As a result, the aggregate values of


The effect of attention and news on the buying behavior of individual and institutional investors 179

(^6) Position records are through December 1996; trading records are through November 1996. See Barber and Odean (2000) for
a more compete description of these data.

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